The transformations that you describe are quite common. Fire does this. Chemical energy in (for example) wood, transforms into heat when you burn the wood, and when you get enough heat, you will then also get light; in a fire, you get a glowing, very hot gas called plasma.
Plants transform light energy into chemical energy during photosynthesis.
radient energy
Various kinds of energy may be converted into thermal energy.In a fire it is chemical energy that is converted to thermal energy.However:In a nuclear reactor, nuclear energy is first converted to thermal energy, and eventually to electrical energy.In a fire chemical energy is also converted to light energy.In a battery chemical energy is converted to electrical energy.In braking systems kinetic energy is converted to thermal energy.
Burning wood in a fireplace converts the chemical energy stored in the wood into thermal energy in the form of heat and light. When gasoline is burned in a car engine, the chemical energy in the gasoline is converted into thermal energy, powering the vehicle.
Producers, such as plants and algae, are organisms in a food chain that can transform light energy into chemical bond energy through the process of photosynthesis. This energy is then passed on to consumers in the ecosystem when they consume the producers.
it is impossible
light
The transformations that you describe are quite common. Fire does this. Chemical energy in (for example) wood, transforms into heat when you burn the wood, and when you get enough heat, you will then also get light; in a fire, you get a glowing, very hot gas called plasma.
A light bulb in an electrical circuit transforms electrical energy into light energy and thermal energy (heat).
It is chemical energy. it transform sun light to chemical energy.
Plants transform light energy into chemical energy during photosynthesis.
They are known as Chloroplasts.
During photosynthesis plants transform light energy from the sun to chemical energy.
Light
radient energy
No, the heat given off by a light bulb is not considered chemical energy. This heat is a byproduct of the conversion of electrical energy into light energy and thermal energy in the filament of the bulb.
The candle itself isn't but the flame is thermal energy.